Mavs edge T'Wolves with late rally

Apr 14, 2009 - 5:02 AM
DALLAS (AP) -- For weeks, the Dallas Mavericks have been doing
all they can to avoid a first-round matchup against the Los
Angeles Lakers, using their best stretch of the season to step
out of that.

On Monday night, they almost wasted it -- against a lottery
team, no less.

Trailing the Minnesota Timberwolves by seven points with 3:13
left, Dirk Nowitzki got his teammates going, then Jason Terry
finished off the rally by swishing an 18-foot jumper from the
right side with 0.2 seconds left for a 96-94 victory.

"The guys stuck together and said, 'There's a lot on the line
here. Let's find a way.' And that's exactly what they did,"
Mavericks coach Rick Carlisle said.

A loss would've knocked Dallas out of the running for the No. 6
seed in the Western Conference and given Utah a clear path to
No. 7.

Now, the Mavs go into the finale on Wednesday night -- at home,
against Houston -- with a win wrapping up No. 7 and a chance to
get No. 6 if they win and New Orleans loses in San Antonio.

"This was one we had to get," said Nowitzki, who had 34 points
and nine rebounds.

The Hornets were getting drubbed by the Rockets on Monday night,
a score that was announced during the fourth quarter of this
game. Terry and Nowitzki insisted they hadn't noticed the
lopsided score on the board across from their bench or heard
anyone mention it until then.

It's easy to believe them considering how much attention they
had to pay attention to Minnesota.

Despite their lousy record, an 11-game losing streak against the
Mavericks and a 13-point deficit just a few minutes into the
game, the Timberwolves grabbed control in the second quarter and
refused to budge.

Craig Smith came off the bench to score a season-high 24 points
and Sebastian Telfair had 14 points and tied his season high
with 12 assists. Minnesota players were jumping up and down on
the bench, hoping to make amends for what happened on their last
visit to Dallas -- when they blew a 29-point, third-quarter
lead.

Instead, they found another heartbreaking way to lose.

"This is the second time we had them here," Telfair said. "We
wanted to win the game and we fought. This would have been a
nice win for us."

Dallas was without Josh Howard, who rested his gimpy left ankle,
and his energy was sorely missed. So was his scoring as Dallas
went 8 minutes, 32 seconds between baskets over the middle two
quarters, missing 14 straight shots along the way.

Nowitzki scored 17 of the club's first 19 points in the third
quarter. He was such a one-man show that no other Mavs player
even took a free throw until the fourth quarter.

Down the stretch, Nowitzki made plays at both ends of the court,
like knocking a ball from Telfair to force a 24-second
violation; a steal; a layup with 41 seconds left to tie it at
94; and -- most important of all -- knocking the ball from
Telfair with about 4 seconds left on a play that was credited as
a steal by Erick Dampier, who ended up with the ball and called
time out with 2.7 seconds left.

Terry went over to his coaches' huddle and said, "Give me the
ball! Give me the ball!" -- something he said he hasn't done all
season.

He ended up taking the inbounds pass from Jason Kidd, shaking
Telfair and nailing his open shot, putting the Mavericks ahead
for the first time since 53-52. Although Terry is usually the
player who works hardest to juice up the crowd, this time he
turned around with no expression while the building erupted in
cheers.

"I just knew I was going to make it," Terry said. "I felt
something."

Said Nowitzki: "He made a heck of a play. He's our closer."

The Timberwolves had one last gasp chance, but -- guess who? --
Nowitzki got a hand on the inbounds pass.

Terry scored 22. The only other double-digit scorer was J.J.
Barea with 12. Kidd had six points, eight assists and six
rebounds. Dampier had six points and 13 rebounds.

This was win No. 49 for Dallas. A victory in the finale would
make it nine straight years with 50.